Saturday, September 20, 2025

The twilight zone (Rush) (LP 3672)

Rush  2112 (CD, Mercury Records, 1976) ****  

Genre: Prog rock

Places I remember: Real Groovy Records

Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: A Passage to Bangkok 

Gear costume: 2112

They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1Part 2Part 3Part 4Part 5Part 6

*Active compensatory factors: I have an ambivalent feeling towards Rush. Previously, I've owned this album on vinyl and other Rush albums on CD, but I have sold them all over the years. I think it comes down to how I feel about Geddy Lee's vocals. Sometimes I like them, other times they put me off.

I needed to get 2112 back though, because the instrumental passages are just so damn good! Plus, it's quite prog in approach. The first side presents a chilling picture of a future world where technology is in control. Not so futurist now, is it! Being one side, it's the perfect length - a 20 minute suite makes up the title track. Side 2 has shorter stand-alone songs.

The musicianship from the trio is first rate - Alex Lifeson on guitars, Neil Peart on drums, and Geddy Lee on bass. These guys are inventive and, on 2112, accessible. This is their first classic album, I do believe.

Where do they all belong? I think I'll call it quits with 2112 and finish on a high. Who knows. I'll probably be tempted to buy post 2112 albums if I find them for a reasonable price (not a given these days).

*I somehow missed publishing this back in the R's. Better late than never.

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